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Alternative Investments: Perils for IRA Trustees 2007-07-01 (2)Alternative Investments: Perils for IRA Trustees 2007-07-01 (2)

Trustees of individual retirement accounts (IRAs) have increasingly seen participants turning to nontraditional or alternative investments in their accounts. These investments include not only real estate but also mortgages and closely held entities such as limited partnerships (LPs) or hedge funds. In many cases, the IRA trustee can acquire these assets only upon the participant's direction. This

David S. Sennett, Independent IRA Consultant

July 1, 2007

21 Min Read
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David Sennett, independent fiduciary risk consultant, Delray Beach, Fla.

Trustees of individual retirement accounts (IRAs) have increasingly seen participants turning to nontraditional or alternative investments in their accounts. These investments include not only real estate but also mortgages and closely held entities such as limited partnerships (LPs) or hedge funds. In many cases, the IRA trustee can acquire these assets only upon the participant's direction. This arrangement, known as a self-directed IRA, leaves the trustee operating as a custodian with no discretion to manage the account's assets.1

While an IRA may not own life insurance contracts or collectibles (with some exemptions), nothing in the Internal Revenue Code makes hol...

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About the Author

David S. Sennett

Independent IRA Consultant

David S. Sennett is an independent IRA consultant in Creve Coeur, Missouri. For over a decade, he dealt with IRA issues as a risk manager for Wachovia and Wells Fargo Banks.